Details of Jamboree In Hills and the Ticket Luck value

Eastern Ohio’s legendary four day country music festival “Jamboree in the Hills” has entertained more than a hundred thousand fans every July for over thirty-six years on Morristown’s beautiful rolling hills. This outdoor event is hosted in Belmont County, where every year thousands take the annual pilgrimage, transforming the otherwise serene town into the famous ‘Country Music Capital’ that it really is.

The four-day party and its many festivities begin on the preceding Monday and include some of the craziest activities and wild contests on the campground site that is filled with over five thousand early arriving campers. Fans gather together to celebrate country music from hundred of miles away, from areas in West Virginia, Ohio, New Jersey, Kentucky, Indiana, New York, Michigan, Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania and Canada among other regions. These fans are the significant other half of the event since they are the one who take it beyond the boundaries of a mere series of concerts and making it definitive country music experience. The festivals’ famous ‘twenty-five’ hours’ live music, basically features current charts toppers, newly emerging acts and country music legends. Jamboree in the Hills tickets are all the rage among country music freaks from the time they return from the festival, till the time they attend the next one.

“Jamboree in the Hills,” which is popularly known as country music’s Super Bowl, started out as an outdoor two-day festival in 1977. The event was an idea of Glenn Reeves and Jerry Brightman, who hosted it near Morristown’s Brush Run Park. It has since grown into a country music union of sorts where fans from around the world come together pitching tents, parking on hills above the spacious amphitheater and all across front yards, filling camp grounds and backyards, bringing in wagons loaded with beer, plenty of ice and lawn chairs.

The festival’s current outdoor amphitheater has been enhanced with many speaker towers along with Jumbotron TV screens which allow fans at top of the hill to easily enjoy these concerts. Jamboree is one go of the most enormous and most celebrated yearly country music events and its range is so wide that it has its own post office and an on-site emergency ward. The concert is organized by Live Nation and showcases a broad variety of legendary, veteran and new musicians running from Thursday to Sunday every July’s third week. The program is a spinoff of WWVA Jamboree but is not affiliated with the present day incarnation of Wheeling Jamboree that airs on WKKX.

At “Jamboree in the Hills” country music acts are the focus of concerts but artists from various other genres are also welcomed to perform, including The Beach Boys, the Steve Miller Band and Weird Al” Yankovic. The entire event is broadcasted live on several local new stations like WTOV, except performers who choose not to go on air. In 2009, only two days of the festival were broadcasted.

The festival has its own theme song which was written by Mayf Nutter in 1978 and is played proudly every year. Written only after the first Jamboree festival, the song’s lyrics describe the initial festival experience and all the excitement and thrill that surrounded it. In recent years another song has been written by Joe Zelek, which has been performed throughout the festival as its general experience tune.

At the Jamboree, there are only very few assigned places or seating arrangements known as lawn seats. During the festival, every morning hundreds of fans rush in through the gates with their tarps, lawn chairs and blankets trying to fix a space closer to the stage. This exciting part of the event is often chaotic and muddy and has over the years been dubbed as “The Redneck Run’.